"I wish you would keep close here though," muttered Dalton; "you'll be

meeting the villain Burrell before----"

"I would fain encounter Sir Willmott Burrell once again, and make him

pay the traitor's forfeit."

"Peace--peace! give Burrell rope enough to hang himself. He'll swing as

high as Haman ere long. Robin told me of the coward's treachery."

"I wish Robin had not accompanied him to London," exclaimed Walter; "I

hate people to carry two faces. But my wonder is that Burrell would

trust him."

"Just because he could not help himself," retorted Robin. "He wanted a

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clever lad who had understanding. His own valet was in France on some

business or another mighty mysterious; and a gentleman like him, who has

a good character and a foul conscience, a good head and a bad heart, has

need of a man of talent, not a loon, about his person. To do full

justice, however, to his discretion, he treated me to as few of his

secrets as he could, and I endeavoured to save him trouble by finding

them all out."

The Buccaneer laughed aloud, but the high-souled Cavalier looked

serious.

"Ah! ah!" said Dalton, "you never did relish machinations, and it is

well you are not left to yourself in this plan of mine: honour is not

the coin to take to a villain's market."

"'Tis the only coin I will ever deal in, Captain; and I told you before

I left Cologne, that on no other condition would I accompany you to

England, except that of being held clear of every act unbefitting a

gentleman or a soldier."

"Young sir," replied Dalton, "when you were indeed young, and long

before you took your degree in morality at the rambling court of the

second Charles, did I ever counsel you to do aught that your--that, in

short, you might not do with perfect honour? I know too well what it is

to sacrifice honour to interest ever to wish you to make the trial. As

for me, I am low enough in character----"

"My kind preserver! my brave friend!" interrupted Walter, touched at his

change of manner. "Forgive such unworthy, such unmerited suspicion. This

is not the first time I have had to learn your kindly care for me. But

for you----"

"Well, there, there boy--I love to call you boy still; I can bear my own

shame, but I could never bear yours."

Dalton paused, apparently with a view to change the subject: the

Cavalier observed-"You quarrel with our young king's morality?"




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